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The Emergence of the Augustan Principate

This image is in the public domain. 1 Source: Wikimedia Commons.

753 BC (April 21) - Foundation of REGAL PERIOD

509 BC – Birth of

REPUBLIC

27 BC -

EMPIRE This image is in the public domain. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

AD 284 – Reforms of

LATE EMPIRE AD 476 – Deposition of Augustulus 2 Evolution of Augustan Power

1) From the Ides to Actium, 44 – 27 BC

2) First ‘constitutional settlement’ – 27 BC

3) Second settlement – 23 BC

4) Grant of consular power – 19 BC

3 44 – 30 BC Dramatis Personae

Marcus Antonius Brutus and Cassius

Marcus Aemilius Lepidus Sextus Pompey

Gaius Julius Octavianus

4 © 2003 Ancient World Mapping Center. Released under CC BY-NC 3.0.

42 BC – Battle of Philippi (Brutus & Cassius) 36 BC – Battle of Naulochus (Sextus Pompey; Lepidus) 5 31 BC – Battle of Actium (Marc Antony) Res Gestae, 25

“The whole of Italy voluntarily took oath of allegiance to me and demanded me as its leader in the war in which I was victorious at Actium. The provinces of the Spains, the Gauls, Africa, Sicily, and Sardania took the same oath of allegiance.”

From and Res Gestae Divi Augusti, translated by Frederick W. Shipley. This material is in the public domain.

6 Res Gestae, 34

“In my sixth and seventh consulships (in 28 and 27 BC), when I had extinguished the flames of civil war, after receiving by universal content the absolute control of affairs, I transferred the republic from my own control to the will of the and the .”

From Velleius Paterculus and Res Gestae Divi Augusti, translated by Frederick W. Shipley. This material is in the public domain.

7 © 2003 Ancient World Mapping Center. Released under CC BY-NC 3.0. 8 , Augustus 47

“The stronger provinces, which could neither easily nor safely be governed by annual meetings, he (Augustus) took to himself; the others he assigned to proconsular selected by lot.”

From Suetonius: The Life of , translated by J.C. Rolfe. This material is in the public domain.

9 53.12

“His [Octavian] professed motive in this was that the senate might fearlessly enjoy the finest portion of the empire, while he himself had the hardships and the dangers; but his real purpose was that by this arrangement the senators will be unarmed and unprepared for battle, while he alone had arms and maintained soldiers.”

From Cassius Dio: Roman History, translated by Earnest Cary. This material is in the public domain. 10 Augustus’ Honors in 27 BC

The corona civica

Image courtesy of Giovanni Dall'Orto. Source: Wikimedia Commons. 11 Augustus’ Honors in 27 BC

The clipeus virtutis

Image courtesy of Marajaara. Source: Wikimedia Commons. License CC BY. 12

After that time [27 BC] I took precedence of all in authority, but of power I possessed no more than those who were my colleagues in any magistracy.

Res Gestae 34.3

From Velleius Paterculus and Res Gestae Divi Augusti, translated by Frederick W. Shipley and adapted by W. Broadhead. This material is in the public domain.

13 © 2003 Ancient World Mapping Center. Released under CC BY-NC 3.0. 14 The Augustan Principate

‘CONSTITUTIONAL’ POWERS:

• Proconsular (from 27) • For life and than that of governors (from 23)

• Tribunicia potestas – powers of a for life (from 23)

• Powers of a consul for life (from 19)

15 SHA, 15

“And once Favorinus, when he yielded to Hadrian’s criticism of a word which he had used, raised a merry laugh among his friends. For when they reproached him for having done wrong in yielding to Hadrian in the matter of a word used by reputable authors, he replied: ‘You are urging a wrong course, my friends, when you do not suffer me to regard as the most learned of men the one who has thirty legions.’”

From Historia Augusta: The Life of Hadrian Part 2, translated by David Magie. This material is in the public domain.

16 The Augustan Principate

‘CONSTITUTIONAL’ POWERS:

• Proconsular imperium (from 27) • For life and maius than that of governors (from 23) • Tribunicia potestas – powers of a tribune for life (from 23) • Powers of a consul for life (from 19)

MILITARY POWER:

• 24 Legions spread around the empire • at Rome – 9,000 men

17 Theater of Pompey, 61-55 BC

Image courtesy of the Theatrum Pompei Project. This image is in the public domain. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

18 Caesar Dictator 49: Dictator I (to oversee elections)

47: Consul II Dictator II for a year after Pharsalus

46: Consul III Dictator III annually renewed for 10 yrs.

Image courtesy of Eric Fidler 45: Consul IV – sole consul – resigned in Fall on flickr. License CC BY-NC. Dictator IV

44: Consul V Dictator in perpetuity 19 MIT OpenCourseWare https://ocw.mit.edu

21H.331 and the Fall of the Spring 2016

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